Hi bpickartz,
Running memtest is never a bad idea, but, as marsmimar said, in order to stress all the address ranges you'll need to run at least an 8 hour loop... an hour or two really doesn't tell you anything. Memtest is good, but it isn't definitive. If you pass an 8 hour memtest loop, you should then boot into Windows and run Prime95. This will catch errors memtest doesn't. Memtest only tests RAM; Prime95 tests memory and cpu: Free Software - GIMPS
Heat doesn't appear to be your problem... at least according to the screenshots you posted... both the cpu and gpu are relatively cool. You might want to have a look in your bios' health section and see what's been set for the shutdown temp? Likewise, you should also be ready to post screenshots of temps while running Prime. Things will get hot, very hot, as the test puts an unrealistic load on the machine... a load you'd never encounter in real world usage.
Run the first Prime95 test with the room fan pointed at the box. Again, to be sure a machine is solid, you need to Prime for at least 8 hours; however, since we're not testing for stability, an hour or two will do. Things heat up rather quickly when Priming, so you should not have to wait very long to see the machine get to max temps. If you see no errors after an hour or two, then re-run the test without the fan. Perhaps you just have a faulty fan on either the cpu or gpu?
A memory leak, per se, would not cause the system to shut off. It would eventually slow to a crawl, but not just shut off. Memory errors would though... and this you'll find out running Prime.
I did notice you had 6 instances of Chrome running... that's a lot. I don't use Chrome, so I'm unaware of any issues it may have, but it would be a good idea to check and see if that's normal behavior.
***EDIT***
Lastly, right click on Computer, select properties. Click System protection (left hand pane), then the advanced tab. At the bottom, under Startup and Recovery, click settings. Make sure "write an event to system log" is checked, and uncheck automatically restart. When the machine bsod's, write down everything on the screen and post it here.
You can undo this later by following the same path. To restart the machine just hit the reset button, or control+alt+del.
Running memtest is never a bad idea, but, as marsmimar said, in order to stress all the address ranges you'll need to run at least an 8 hour loop... an hour or two really doesn't tell you anything. Memtest is good, but it isn't definitive. If you pass an 8 hour memtest loop, you should then boot into Windows and run Prime95. This will catch errors memtest doesn't. Memtest only tests RAM; Prime95 tests memory and cpu: Free Software - GIMPS
Heat doesn't appear to be your problem... at least according to the screenshots you posted... both the cpu and gpu are relatively cool. You might want to have a look in your bios' health section and see what's been set for the shutdown temp? Likewise, you should also be ready to post screenshots of temps while running Prime. Things will get hot, very hot, as the test puts an unrealistic load on the machine... a load you'd never encounter in real world usage.
Run the first Prime95 test with the room fan pointed at the box. Again, to be sure a machine is solid, you need to Prime for at least 8 hours; however, since we're not testing for stability, an hour or two will do. Things heat up rather quickly when Priming, so you should not have to wait very long to see the machine get to max temps. If you see no errors after an hour or two, then re-run the test without the fan. Perhaps you just have a faulty fan on either the cpu or gpu?
A memory leak, per se, would not cause the system to shut off. It would eventually slow to a crawl, but not just shut off. Memory errors would though... and this you'll find out running Prime.
I did notice you had 6 instances of Chrome running... that's a lot. I don't use Chrome, so I'm unaware of any issues it may have, but it would be a good idea to check and see if that's normal behavior.
***EDIT***
Lastly, right click on Computer, select properties. Click System protection (left hand pane), then the advanced tab. At the bottom, under Startup and Recovery, click settings. Make sure "write an event to system log" is checked, and uncheck automatically restart. When the machine bsod's, write down everything on the screen and post it here.
You can undo this later by following the same path. To restart the machine just hit the reset button, or control+alt+del.
My Computer
- OS
- 7 Ultimate x64
- CPU
- i5-2500k
- Motherboard
- Asus P8P67 Pro
- Memory
- 8GB G.Skill Ripjaws X F3-12800CL7D-8GBXH 1866MHz 8-9-8-24
- Graphics Card(s)
- EVGA GTX 570 SC
- Sound Card
- X-Fi Titanium Fatality
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Samsung S27A550H 27" LED
- Screen Resolution
- 1920x1080
- Hard Drives
- OCZ Vertex 3 120GB.
1TB Samsung F3.
2TB Samsung F4.
- PSU
- PC Power & Cooling Silencer 760
- Case
- Lian Li Lancool K62
- Cooling
- Thermalright Venomous X Black/Scythe S-Flex/Shin-Etsu X23
- Keyboard
- MS Natural Elite 4000 Ergonomic
- Mouse
- Logitech G500
- Internet Speed
- 6MB/768
- Other Info
- Logitech Z-5500 505 watts.
D-Link DGL-4500.
Tripp-Lite Smart Pro 1500.